Eduardo Llull

In Day Care Deception: What the Child Care Establishment Isn't Telling Us, Brian Robertson lucidly explains what's at stake in what amounts to a national scandal with a nationwide cover-up.

The United States has the highest rate of child homicide and child suicide in the world. The childhood murder rate has tripled since 1950, 7.7-million children suffer from emotional disorders; 50% of girls and 55% of boys report some form of sexual experience before age 18; and rates of sexual abuse of children are up 350% in the last 20 years.

During the same period, the number of children left alone after school has increased from 1.6 million to 12 million in the last three decades. Not surprisingly, this all coincides with the veritable across-the-board victory for the contemporary feminist movement.

This movement claims what would have been unthinkable a generation ago: Infants have no particular need for their mothers, and the traditional family is but a social construct that must be smashed, lest women be held captive by it.

Enter day care. Day care liberates mothers from the burden of childrearing. As a result, feminists have strenuously propagandized women into supporting a $13-billion industry, serving 7 million children who spend on average 39 hours a week in day care.